| BACONANDEGGS | Birdsfoot trefoil, perennial plant with red-tipped yellow flowers (5-3-4) |
| ISADORA | A semi-cactus dahlia with red-tipped yellow petals ... partly Arabis - adorable (7) |
| ASTILBE | A genus of perennial plants with red or white flowers (7) |
| LOLLOROSSO | Lettuce with red-tipped leaves (5, 5) |
| FUMITORY | From the Latin meaning "smoke of the earth", arable plant with seeds eaten by the turtle dove with those of the scarlet pimpernel, clover, birdsfoot trefoil and chickweed (8) |
| BACON | Cured gammon-, ham- or pancetta-like flitch, known to the French as lard and imagined as the reddish tips of the egg yolk-yellow flowers of the birdsfoot trefoil (5) |
| TOMTHUMB | "Pollex"-sized hero of English folklore whose tininess inspired the names of various small plants and vegetables, including a birdsfoot trefoil, a butterhead lettuce, a dwarf snapdragon and a nasturti |
| EGGSANDBACON | Name for various plants with red and yellow flowers (4,3,5) |
| JACOBSLADDER | Polemonium caeruleum, perennial plant with blue flowers (6,6) |
| YEWTREE | With bark originally used in the synthesis of some chemotherapy drugs, a large, woody churchyard plant with red arils, Taxus baccata (3,4) |
| RUNNERBEAN | Climbing plant with red flowers and edible pods also called a scarlet runner (6,4) |
| RUNNER | Climbing plant with red flowers and edible pods also called a scarlet runner (6,4) |
| BEAN | Climbing plant with red flowers and edible pods also called a scarlet runner (6,4) |
| POPPY | Temperate plant with red, orange or white flowers and a milky sap (5) |
| ALOE | Genus of liliaceous plants with red or yellow flowers (4) |
| ORACHE | Edible plant with red, yellow or green leaves |
| CAMPION | Wild plant with red or white flowers (7) |
| ANEMONE | Small plant with red, purple, or white flowers that are shaped like cups (7) |
| POKEWEED | North American plant with red stems, spikes of cream flowers, and purple berries (8) |
| IMPATIENS | Plant with red,pink or white flowers,aka Busy Lizzie (9) |